Business Day

Olympics on hold, relief for athletes

• IOC postpones Games for a year as Japan comes to terms with $12bn invested in the run-up

- Sakura Murakami and Karolos Grohmann Tokyo/Athens

The Tokyo Olympics were postponed on Tuesday into 2021, the first such delay in the 124year modern history of the Games, as the coronaviru­s crisis wrecked the last internatio­nal sporting showpiece still standing in 2020.

Though a huge blow to Japan, which invested $12bn in the runup, the decision was a relief to thousands of athletes fretting over how to train as the world headed into lockdown over the disease that has claimed more than 16,500 lives.

Pressure had been building on the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) and its powerful president, Thomas Bach, with some athletes and sporting bodies critical of the time taken to make an inevitable decision.

After a call with Bach, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said the July 24-August 9 competitio­n would be reschedule­d for the northern hemisphere summer of 2021 at the latest as proof of victory over the virus.

“We asked president Bach to consider postponeme­nt of about one year to make it possible for athletes to play in the best condition,” Abe said. “President Bach said he is in agreement 100%.”

The IOC confirmed that. It was the first postponeme­nt of the Olympics, though the Games were cancelled outright several times during the two world wars in the 20th century. Major Cold War boycotts also disrupted the Moscow and Los Angeles

Games in 1980 and 1984.

Athletes were disappoint­ed but broadly endorsed the delay, given health risks and disruption to their training as gyms, stadiums and swimming pools shut down around the world.

“I compete in a little bike race, which is nothing compared to what is going on in the world right now,” American Olympic BMX champion Connor Fields said, before the official announceme­nt. “No sport is more important if it means more people might potentiall­y die from this.”

Australia’s two-time Olympic champion swimmer, Cate Campbell, said she was reeling but ready for the new challenge.

GOALPOSTS SHIFTED

“The goalposts haven’t disappeare­d — just shifted,” she said, after her nation announced it would not go to Tokyo 2020 if the Games went ahead.

US skateboard­er and gold medal hopeful Nyjah Huston was frustrated, though, especially given his sport was scheduled to make its debut at the Tokyo Games.

“When skating finally makes it in the Olympics then it gets postponed,” the 25-year-old wrote on Instagram, after a delay had begun to look inevitable.

“I was feelin [sic] ready too ... now I’m going to have to be a year older for this!”

The coronaviru­s outbreak has raged around the world since early in 2020, infecting nearly 380,000 people and wrecking sports events from the football Euros to Formula One.

Despite their disappoint­ment, not to mention the logistical headaches and financial losses coming, a poll showed about 70% of Japanese agreed with a delay. Tokyo governor Yuriko

Koike told reporters the delayed Games would still be branded “Tokyo 2020”.

In a crowded sporting calendar, which will be making up for this year’s cancellati­ons, World Athletics said it would be willing to move the 2021 World Championsh­ips, scheduled for August 6-15 in Oregon to clear a path for the Olympics.

The Athletics Associatio­n said a survey of more than 4,000 track and field competitor­s showed 78% wanted the Games delayed. The associatio­n’s American founder, twice Olympic triple jump champion Christian Taylor, is among athletes unable to train due to social distancing and closure of facilities.

NO SANDPIT

“There is no sandpit for me. I have not put on jump spikes for two weeks,” he told Britain’s Times newspaper.

Tuesday’s decision came 122 days before the planned opening ceremony at Japan’s newly built National Stadium, which was to usher in the 16-day carnival of sport featuring 11,000 athletes from 206 nations and territorie­s.

It was not the first time a Japanese Olympics has run into problems. Both the 1940 summer and winter Olympic Games were due to be held in Japan but were cancelled due to World War 2.

It was not yet clear whether the 57% of athletes who had already secured spots in Tokyo would need to qualify again for the rearranged Olympics.

 ?? /AFP ?? Olympic blues:
A photograph­er at a media conference in Tokyo on Tuesday when the postponeme­nt of the Olympic Games was announced.
/AFP Olympic blues: A photograph­er at a media conference in Tokyo on Tuesday when the postponeme­nt of the Olympic Games was announced.

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